Considering the zero, I'm fairly comfortable the average human is pretty well situated in the negative numbers of that scale.
qyron
I took it as a good humoured take ad I answered it in the same fashion.
I could, in fact, draw the entire thing on paper. Technical drawing was taugh to me in school and I took quite well to it; I still like to draw today but more as an artistic expression.
Although I wouldn't consider what I make as artistic under any light.
But my original still holds. Yes, I could. But I would have to make everything from scratch every single time we wanted to try an idea.
Not really practical.
I'm going to look into LibreCAD and FreeCAD. Seem to be the most promising solutions.
I could but it would be a hassle to draw from scratch an entire blueprint every time some idea came to us to improve the space. Hence, the digital option.
1947
So, old but not that old.
They don't. :) First place I asked. The house is so old it still falls under a exemption to have blueprints deposited at the municipality. In fact, it wasn't even built with blueprints.
I understand your concern and advice.
My house was built using a logic that only the outter walls, which are stone on the ground floor and cement block on the top floor, are load bearing.
These will not be touched, besides removing and replacing old mortars.
On the inside, all the walls are for show, made of wood I want to reclaim and a couple that were built in clay bricks but that have no load bearing capability nor structural role.
Drawing the blueprints as the house exists today will serve to have a birds eye view of the house to work on, even with professionals, if the need arises in the future.
This sort of house is not considered interesting for professionals in my area; the structure is too simple and can not accomodate that many changes. And because I'm not rebuilding but just renewing, no projects, licenses or consultancy is required. This makes this kind of job not very appealing.
And thank you for reminding me that electrical and water plants are a thing, aswell.
I don't think the creators of the Sims designed the game with that in mind but if works, it is not stupid.
Unusual solution but I can see it working! Most definetely.
But I do require some degree of accuracy on what I intend to do, so FreeCAD is lining up be the best solution, taking from the answer I'm getting.
The house is old and drawing an as much as humanly possible accurate blueprint would be a plus. And I do have some very weird angles in it.
Not in the mood to pay for a solution that a FOSS program may cover as well, considering it won't be used for professional purposes.
A native GNOME solution. Wasn't expecting that one.
I respect Blender very much but I'm also aware it requires a very deep dive to manage to use at minimum. So, as much as I can, I'll avoid it.
Considering the actions currently being perpetrated against children (and women, elderly and civilians) by the the nation at the zero position, being in the negative range of that scale sounds pretty good.